Educational Goals vs Objectives
Learning Outcomes vs Activities
Assessment & Measurement
Bloom’s Taxonomy
SMART/ABCD Objectives
100

True/False – Educational goals are broad, while instructional objectives are specific.

True

100

Is “students complete a worksheet” a learning outcome or an activity?

Activity

100

What does assessment aim to measure?

Student learning in relation to objectives.

100

What’s the lowest level of Bloom’s revised taxonomy?

Remembering

100

In SMART objectives, what does the “M” stand for?

Measurable

200

Give one example of an educational goal.

“Students will develop critical thinking skills.”

200

State one learning outcome for a science experiment.

“Students will correctly record temperature changes during an experiment.”

200

What are the three stages of classroom measurement?

Planning, gathering evidence, interpreting results.

200

Name the level: “Students design an experiment to test osmosis.”

Creating

200

Write one objective using the ABCD model.

“Given a map (Condition), students (Audience) will identify five Caribbean islands (Behavior) with 90% accuracy (Degree).”

300

Rewrite this broad goal into a specific objective: “Students will understand the Haitian Revolution.”

“By the end of the lesson, students will describe two causes of the Haitian Revolution with 80% accuracy.”

300

Convert this activity into a learning outcome: “Students draw a diagram of the cell.”

“Students will label five parts of a plant cell correctly on a diagram.”

300

Match: Formative vs Summative – Which happens during learning and which after?

Formative = during learning; Summative = after learning.

300

 Which level involves “justifying a decision”?

Evaluating

300

Which SMART element ensures objectives are practical in real classrooms?

Achievable

400

What’s the main difference between “goal” and “objective”?

Goals = broad intentions; Objectives = specific, measurable steps.

400

Which is easier to measure: outcomes or activities? Explain.

Outcomes, because they show what students learned rather than what they did.

400

Define “assessment target.”

A specific skill, knowledge, or behavior that assessment is designed to measure.

400

Place these in order: Apply, Evaluate, Remember, Analyze.

Remember → Apply → Analyze → Evaluate

400

Transform this vague objective into a SMART one: “Students will know photosynthesis.”

“By the end of class, students will describe the process of photosynthesis in three steps with 80% accuracy.”

500

Why are objectives more useful than goals for classroom assessment?

Because objectives are measurable and observable, making assessment possible.

500

Give an example where the activity and outcome might look similar but differ in assessment.

“Students write an essay.” Outcome: “Students will argue for or against renewable energy using at least three supporting points.”

500

Give one example of how measurement ensures fairness in grading.

Using a rubric with clear criteria for all students.

500

Give one affective domain example at the “Valuing” level.

“Students will show respect for cultural diversity by participating in group discussions.”

500

Break down the ABCD in this objective: “Given a microscope, the student will correctly identify 3 cell structures with 90% accuracy.”

  • A (Audience) = the student

  • B (Behavior) = identify cell structures

  • C (Condition) = given a microscope

  • D (Degree) = 3 structures with 90% accuracy

M
e
n
u